Effects of artificial dawn and morning blue light on daytime cognitive performance, well-being, cortisol and melatonin levels.
Effects of artificial dawn and morning blue light on daytime cognitive performance, well-being, cortisol and melatonin levels.
Light exposure elicits numerous effects on human physiology and behavior, such as better cognitive performance and
mood. Here we investigated the role of morning light exposure as a countermeasure for impaired cognitive
performance and mood under sleep restriction (SR). Seventeen participants took part of a 48h laboratory protocol,
during which three different light settings (separated by 2 wks) were administered each morning after two 6-h sleep
restriction nights: a blue monochromatic LED (light-emitting diode) light condition (BL; 100 lux at 470 nm for 20 min)
starting 2 h after scheduled wake-up time, a dawn-simulating light (DsL) starting 30 min before and ending 20 min
after scheduled wake-up time (polychromatic light gradually increasing from 0 to 250 lux), and a dim light (DL)
condition for 2 h beginning upon scheduled wake time (58 lux). Cognitive tasks were performed every 2 h during
scheduled wakefulness, and questionnaires were administered hourly to assess subjective sleepiness, mood, and wellbeing. Salivary melatonin and cortisol were collected throughout scheduled wakefulness in regular intervals, and the
effects on melatonin were measured after only one light pulse. Following the first SR, analysis of the time course of
cognitive performance during scheduled wakefulness indicated a decrease following DL, whereas it remained stable
following BL and significantly improved after DsL. Cognitive performance levels during the second day after SR were
not significantly affected by the different light conditions. However, after both SR nights, mood and well-being were
significantly enhanced after exposure to morning DsL compared with DL and BL. Melatonin onset occurred earlier
after morning BL exposure, than after morning DsL and DL, whereas salivary cortisol levels were higher at wake-up
time after DsL compared with BL and DL. Our data indicate that exposure to an artificial morning dawn simulation
light improves subjective well-being, mood, and cognitive performance, as compared with DL and BL, with minimal
impact on circadian phase. Thus, DsL may provide an effective strategy for enhancing cognitive performance, wellbeing, and mood under mild sleep restriction.
988-997
Gabel, V
e3639ba4-d09d-434d-8495-0e40b502a02e
Maire, M
42c8074b-8638-460d-8ac8-dbf8390a0b36
Reichert, CF
8beb084e-1d68-475e-8777-9e0380f0b594
Chellappa, SL
516582b5-3cba-4644-86c9-14c91a4510f2
Schmidt, C
b24f0087-3762-429e-9769-33280a332789
Hommes, V
9c568fa6-eae4-4b2f-a1e8-ea1874ede1e4
Viola, AU
4d8ca660-83e3-4a76-bb2d-5a34030ad0d2
Cajochen, C
f605e720-e417-45dc-9b5c-244b1a1d6265
10 July 2013
Gabel, V
e3639ba4-d09d-434d-8495-0e40b502a02e
Maire, M
42c8074b-8638-460d-8ac8-dbf8390a0b36
Reichert, CF
8beb084e-1d68-475e-8777-9e0380f0b594
Chellappa, SL
516582b5-3cba-4644-86c9-14c91a4510f2
Schmidt, C
b24f0087-3762-429e-9769-33280a332789
Hommes, V
9c568fa6-eae4-4b2f-a1e8-ea1874ede1e4
Viola, AU
4d8ca660-83e3-4a76-bb2d-5a34030ad0d2
Cajochen, C
f605e720-e417-45dc-9b5c-244b1a1d6265
Gabel, V, Maire, M, Reichert, CF, Chellappa, SL, Schmidt, C, Hommes, V, Viola, AU and Cajochen, C
(2013)
Effects of artificial dawn and morning blue light on daytime cognitive performance, well-being, cortisol and melatonin levels.
Chronobiology International, 30 (8), .
(doi:10.3109/07420528.2013.793196).
Abstract
Light exposure elicits numerous effects on human physiology and behavior, such as better cognitive performance and
mood. Here we investigated the role of morning light exposure as a countermeasure for impaired cognitive
performance and mood under sleep restriction (SR). Seventeen participants took part of a 48h laboratory protocol,
during which three different light settings (separated by 2 wks) were administered each morning after two 6-h sleep
restriction nights: a blue monochromatic LED (light-emitting diode) light condition (BL; 100 lux at 470 nm for 20 min)
starting 2 h after scheduled wake-up time, a dawn-simulating light (DsL) starting 30 min before and ending 20 min
after scheduled wake-up time (polychromatic light gradually increasing from 0 to 250 lux), and a dim light (DL)
condition for 2 h beginning upon scheduled wake time (58 lux). Cognitive tasks were performed every 2 h during
scheduled wakefulness, and questionnaires were administered hourly to assess subjective sleepiness, mood, and wellbeing. Salivary melatonin and cortisol were collected throughout scheduled wakefulness in regular intervals, and the
effects on melatonin were measured after only one light pulse. Following the first SR, analysis of the time course of
cognitive performance during scheduled wakefulness indicated a decrease following DL, whereas it remained stable
following BL and significantly improved after DsL. Cognitive performance levels during the second day after SR were
not significantly affected by the different light conditions. However, after both SR nights, mood and well-being were
significantly enhanced after exposure to morning DsL compared with DL and BL. Melatonin onset occurred earlier
after morning BL exposure, than after morning DsL and DL, whereas salivary cortisol levels were higher at wake-up
time after DsL compared with BL and DL. Our data indicate that exposure to an artificial morning dawn simulation
light improves subjective well-being, mood, and cognitive performance, as compared with DL and BL, with minimal
impact on circadian phase. Thus, DsL may provide an effective strategy for enhancing cognitive performance, wellbeing, and mood under mild sleep restriction.
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More information
Accepted/In Press date: 28 March 2013
Published date: 10 July 2013
Additional Information:
We thank Dr. Go¨tz for medical screenings; Claudia
Renz, Marie-France Dattler, and Giovanni Balestrieri
for their help in data acquisition; and Amandine
Valomon for her help in recruiting volunteers and the
volunteers to participating.
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 479589
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/479589
ISSN: 0742-0528
PURE UUID: 3397015e-b9a2-40c9-b9cc-ae043d8999f1
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Date deposited: 26 Jul 2023 16:39
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:20
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Contributors
Author:
V Gabel
Author:
M Maire
Author:
CF Reichert
Author:
SL Chellappa
Author:
C Schmidt
Author:
V Hommes
Author:
AU Viola
Author:
C Cajochen
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